Darnell Moore to Deliver Capstone Address for Black History Month on 2/23

February is Black History Month, and Dr. Keith Green, Associate Professor of English and Director of the Africana Studies program, has put together a full slate of activities that are inspired by a West African symbol called “Sankofa,” which translates to “go back and fetch it.” Correspondingly, this year’s Black History Month events at Rutgers–Camden revolve around the theme of retrieving ideas, histories, and moments from the past to inform where we stand today.

The concluding event for Black History Month, to take place on Tuesday, February 23rd, is the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Black History Month Lecture, named for the journalist, editor, suffragist, and Civil Rights leader. The speaker is Camden native Darnell Moore, whose lecture will certainly coincide with this year’s theme, as he’ll literally be coming back to the place where he laid the foundation for the rest of his life. To deliver the capstone address for Black History Month in his hometown is quite meaningful to Moore. “Camden inspired a lot of what I do,” the Camden High School graduate says. “To give a talk of this type in Camden is really important to me.”

Darnell Moore, a native of Camden, will deliver the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Lecture as part of Black History Month, on February 23rd.

A senior correspondent at MicNews, co-managing editor at The Feminist Wire, and writer whose work has been published in popular media such as Huffington Post and The Advocate as well as in academic journals like Women Studies Quarterly and Harvard Journal of African American Policy, Moore also is a passionate activist for social justice issues, particularly those dealing with marginal identity and youth development. He credits growing up in Camden for making him more aware of the world around him, thinking about issues relating to race, class, gender identity, socioeconomic status, and sexual orientation. “My experience in Camden is the avenue through which I began to ask questions,” he says.

Moore uses writing as a way to instigate conversation about these issues, calling writing “intellectual activism.” He has also used the classroom as a way to think about notions of disenfranchisement and systemic oppression, teaching at universities such as Fordham, City College of New York City, Vassar, and the New Brunswick and Newark campuses of Rutgers. While in Newark, Moore connected with the vibrant LGBTQ community in that city, and eventually became the chair of Cory Booker’s LGBTQ Concerns Advisory Commission, when Booker was the mayor of Newark. Moore calls his time in Newark a “training ground for oppression, which catapulted me into advocacy work.” He excels in this arena, earning the 2012 Humanitarian Award from the American Conference on Diversity, among other accolades.

Through his work with LGBTQ youth, Moore was inspired to start the social program YOU Belong, an organization that Moore cofounded with former NFL player Wade Davis II that promotes diversity inclusion through youth development programming. Their first initiative is a four-day workshop that gives sports and leadership clinics to LGBTQ youth and straight allies, as a way to create a safe space and encourage education and exercise.